Neuraminidase

Neuraminidase diagram

Neuraminidase enzymes are glycoside hydrolase enzymes (EC 3.2.1.18) that cleave the glycosidic linkages of neuraminic acids. Neuraminidase enzymes are a large family, found in a range of organisms. The best-known neuraminidase is the viral neuraminidase, a drug target for the prevention of the spread of influenza infection. The viral neuraminidases are frequently used as antigenic determinants found on the surface of the Influenza virus. Some variants of the influenza neuraminidase confer more virulence to the virus than others. Other homologs are found in mammalian cells, which have a range of functions. At least four mammalian sialidase homologs have been described in the human genome (see NEU1, NEU2, NEU3, NEU4).

Reaction

There are two major classes of Neuraminidase that cleave exo or endo poly-sialic acids:

exo-α-sialidase
Identifiers
EC number 3.2.1.18
CAS number 9001-67-6
Databases
IntEnz IntEnz view
BRENDA BRENDA entry
ExPASy NiceZyme view
KEGG KEGG entry
MetaCyc metabolic pathway
PRIAM profile
PDB structures RCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
Gene Ontology AmiGO / EGO
endo-α-sialidase
Identifiers
EC number 3.2.1.129
CAS number 91195-87-8
Databases
IntEnz IntEnz view
BRENDA BRENDA entry
ExPASy NiceZyme view
KEGG KEGG entry
MetaCyc metabolic pathway
PRIAM profile
PDB structures RCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
Gene Ontology AmiGO / EGO

Function

Neuraminidases, also called sialidases, catalyze the hydrolysis of terminal sialic acid residues from the newly formed virions and from the host cell receptors.[3] Sialidase activities include assistance in the mobility of virus particles through the respiratory tract mucus and in the elution of virion progeny from the infected cell.[4][5]

Subtypes

Swiss-Prot lists 137 types of neuraminidase from various species as of October 18, 2006.[6] Nine subtypes of influenza neuraminidase are known; many occur only in various species of duck and chicken. Subtypes N1 and N2 have been positively linked to epidemics in man, and strains with N3 or N7 subtypes have been identified in a number of isolated deaths.

The following is a list of major classes of neuraminidase enzymes:

sialidase 1 (lysosomal sialidase)
Identifiers
Symbol NEU1
Entrez 4758
HUGO 7758
OMIM 608272
RefSeq NM_000434
UniProt Q99519
Other data
Locus Chr. 6 p21
sialidase 2 (cytosolic sialidase)
Identifiers
Symbol NEU2
Entrez 4759
HUGO 7759
OMIM 605528
RefSeq NM_005383
UniProt Q9Y3R4
Other data
Locus Chr. 2 q37
sialidase 3 (membrane sialidase)
Identifiers
Symbol NEU3
Entrez 10825
HUGO 7760
OMIM 604617
RefSeq NM_006656
UniProt Q9UQ49
Other data
Locus Chr. 11 q13.5
sialidase 4
Identifiers
Symbol NEU4
Entrez 129807
HUGO 21328
OMIM 608527
RefSeq NM_080741
UniProt Q8WWR8
Other data
Locus Chr. 2 q37.3

Structure

Main article: Viral neuraminidase

Influenza neuraminidase exists as a mushroom-shape projection on the surface of the influenza virus. It has a head consisting of four co-planar and roughly spherical subunits, and a hydrophobic region that is embedded within the interior of the virus' membrane. It comprises a single polypeptide chain that is oriented in the opposite direction to the hemagglutinin antigen. The composition of the polypeptide is a single chain of six conserved polar amino acids, followed by hydrophilic, variable amino acids. β-Sheets predominate as the secondary level of protein conformation.

Recent emergence of oseltamivir and zanamivir resistant human influenza A(H1N1) H274Y has emphasized the need for suitable expression systems to obtain large quantities of highly pure and stable, recombinant neuraminidase through two separate artificial tetramerization domains that facilitate the formation of catalytically active neuraminidase homotetramers from yeast and Staphylothermus marinus, which allow for secretion of FLAG-tagged proteins and further purification.[7]

Mechanism

Proposed mechanism of catalysis of influenza virus sialidase 4 (Link to glycosidase mechanism)
Proposed transition state for the sialidase mechanism 7
Chemical structures of 4- substituted Neu5Ac2en derivatives 8

The enzymatic mechanism of influenza virus sialidase has been studied by Taylor et al., shown in Figure 1. The enzyme catalysis process has four steps. The first step involves the distortion of the α-sialoside from a 2C5 chair conformation (the lowest-energy form in solution) to a pseudoboat conformation when the sialoside binds to the sialidase. The second step leads to an oxocarbocation intermediate, the sialosyl cation. The third step is the formation of Neu5Ac initially as the α-anomer, and then mutarotation and release as the more thermodynamically-stable β-Neu5Ac.[8]

Inhibitors

Neuraminidase inhibitors are useful for combating influenza infection: zanamivir, administered by inhalation; oseltamivir, administered orally; and under research is peramivir administered parenterally, that is through intravenous or intramuscular injection.

There are two major proteins on the surface of influenza virus particles. One is the lectin haemagglutinin protein with three relatively shallow sialic acid-binding sites and the other is enzyme sialidase with the active site in a pocket. Because of the relative deep active site in which low-molecular-weight inhibitors can make multiple favorable interactions and approachable methods of designing transition-state analogues in the hydrolysis of sialosides, the sialidase becomes more attractive anti-influenza drug target than the haemagglutinin.[9] After the X-ray crystal structures of several influenza virus sialidases were available, the structure-based inhibitor design was applied to discover potent inhibitors of this enzyme.[10]

The unsaturated sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid [Neu5ac]) derivative 2-deoxy-2, 3-didehydro-D-N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac2en), a sialosyl cation transition-state (Figure 2) analogue, is believed the most potent inhibitor core template. To prepare structurally modified Neu5Ac2en derivatives may give more effective inhibitors.[11]

Many Neu5Ac2en-based compounds have been synthesized and tested for their influenza virus sialidase inhibitory potential. For example: The 4-substituted Neu5Ac2en derivatives (Figure 3), 4-amino-Neu5Ac2en (Compound 1), which showed two orders of magnitude better inhibition of influenza virus sialidase than Neu5Ac2en5 and 4-guanidino-Neu5Ac2en (Compound 2), known as Zanamivir, which is now marketed for treatment of influenza virus as a drug, have been designed by von Itzstein and coworkers.[12] A series of amide-linked C9 modified Neu5Ac2en have been reported by Megesh and colleagues as NEU1 inhibitors.[13]

See also

References

  1. Schauer R (1982). "Chemistry, metabolism, and biological functions of sialic acids". Adv Carbohydr Chem Biochem. Advances in Carbohydrate Chemistry and Biochemistry. 40: 131–234. doi:10.1016/S0065-2318(08)60109-2. ISBN 978-0-12-007240-8. PMID 6762816.
  2. 1 2 Cabezas JA (August 1991). "Some questions and suggestions on the type references of the official nomenclature (IUB) for sialidase(s) and endosialidase". Biochem. J. 278 (Pt 1): 311–2. doi:10.1042/bj2780311. PMC 1151486Freely accessible. PMID 1883340.
  3. von Itzstein M (December 2007). "The war against influenza: discovery and development of sialidase inhibitors". Nature Reviews. Drug Discovery. 6 (12): 967–74. doi:10.1038/nrd2400. PMID 18049471.
  4. Palese P, Tobita K, Ueda M, Compans RW (October 1974). "Characterization of temperature sensitive influenza virus mutants defective in neuraminidase". Virology. 61 (2): 397–410. doi:10.1016/0042-6822(74)90276-1. PMID 4472498.
  5. Liu C, Eichelberger MC, Compans RW, Air GM (February 1995). "Influenza type A virus neuraminidase does not play a role in viral entry, replication, assembly, or budding". Journal of Virology. 69 (2): 1099–106. PMC 188682Freely accessible. PMID 7815489.
  6. Search in UniProt Knowledgebase (Swiss-Prot and TrEMBL) for: neuraminidase
  7. Schmidt PM, Attwood RM, Mohr PG, Barrett SA, McKimm-Breschkin JL (2011) "A Generic System for the Expression and Purification of Soluble and Stable Influenza Neuraminidase". PLoS ONE 6(2): e16284. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0016284
  8. Taylor NR, von Itzstein M (March 1994). "Molecular modeling studies on ligand binding to sialidase from influenza virus and the mechanism of catalysis". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 37 (5): 616–24. doi:10.1021/jm00031a011. PMID 8126701.
  9. Drickamer, Kurt; Taylor, Maureen P. (2006). Introduction to glycobiology. Oxford [Oxfordshire]: Oxford University Press. pp. 177–178. ISBN 0-19-928278-1.
  10. Dyason, Jeffrey C.; Itzstein, Mark von (2001). "Anti-Influenza Virus Drug Design: Sialidase Inhibitors". Australian Journal of Chemistry. 54 (11): 663–670. doi:10.1071/CH01173.
  11. Fgedi, Pťer (2006). The organic chemistry of sugars. Washington, DC: Taylor & Francis. pp. 822–823. ISBN 0-8247-5355-0.
  12. von Itzstein M, Wu WY, Jin B (June 1994). "The synthesis of 2,3-didehydro-2,4-dideoxy-4-guanidinyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid: a potent influenza virus sialidase inhibitor". Carbohydrate Research. 259 (2): 301–5. doi:10.1016/0008-6215(94)84065-2. PMID 8050102.
  13. Magesh S, Moriya S, Suzuki T, Miyagi T, Ishida H, Kiso M (January 2008). "Design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of human sialidase inhibitors. Part 1: selective inhibitors of lysosomal sialidase (NEU1)". Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters. 18 (2): 532–7. doi:10.1016/j.bmcl.2007.11.084. PMID 18068975.
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